Inquiry into the effects of the ongoing efficiency dividend on smaller public sector agencies
        
  
    | Introduction | 
  
    | 3.1 | As outlined in chapter 1, ‘smaller agencies’ are  defined as those with an operational budget (i.e., departmental as distinct  from administrative appropriations) of $150 million per annum or less.   | 
  
    | 3.2 | This threshold captures a variety of cultural  agencies and the inquiry received submissions from the National Gallery of Australia, the  National Library of Australia, the Australian War Memorial, the Australian  Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies, and the Australian National Maritime   Museum amongst others.          | 
  
  
    | 3.3 | There are a number of features that distinguish  cultural agencies from other agencies.  Of particular note is that these agencies often hold a large number of  valuable assets and have a high proportion of relatively fixed costs related to  maintaining those collections and the buildings in which they are housed.  Many of their discretionary functions, such  as travelling exhibitions, serve to benefit large numbers of regional and rural  communities. Importantly, collecting  institutions are also often subject to a mandate to grow their  collections.   | 
  
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    | The evidence | 
  
    | 3.4 | The inquiry received seven submissions from  cultural agencies.1 The Committee also took oral evidence from a  number of individuals and organisations. This evidence is presented below. | 
  
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    | Non-discretionary and fixed costs | 
  
    | 3.5 | The Committee notes that while there is some  inconsistency about whether costs related to labour, utilities, maintenance  costs and the like are non-discretionary and/or fixed, there was a clear  consensus that depreciation is a non-discretionary and fixed cost.  There was also agreement that the application  of the efficiency dividend, calculated as a percentage of an agency’s total  appropriation, which includes depreciation, is perceived by these agencies as a  disproportionate disadvantage.   | 
  
    | 3.6 | Cultural agencies very often hold significant  numbers of valuable assets that are subject to depreciation funding.  The National Gallery of Australia (NGA), for  example, holds assets including the national collection of artworks valued2 at $3.2 billion.  The NGA’s total  appropriation funding of approximately $41.8 million in 2008-09 includes  approximately $16.5 million in depreciation funding.3 Similarly, the Australian National Maritime  Museum (ANNM) submit that of the $23.6 million baseline appropriation  funding it received in 2008-09, approximately $9.6 million is appropriated  for depreciation for asset replacement.4 The Australian War Memorial (AWM) also  provided evidence that of its annual appropriation for 2008-09 of  $38.6 million, $15.4 million is related to expenditure on  depreciation.5  | 
  
    | 3.7 | The Committee heard that as a result of these  high proportions of depreciation costs, the efficiency dividend is in reality  actually higher.  This is because  agencies with high non-discretionary costs such as those related to  depreciation, must find the 3.25% from a smaller funding base.  As Mr Froud of  the National Gallery of Australia  states: 
      [Depreciation] is the given and  everything else changes around it. That is why, in our case, we are saying the  3.25 per cent efficiency dividend is actually a five per cent cut in our  operating expenses because the depreciation expense cannot change.6 | 
  
    | 3.8 | Similarly, the National Library of Australia  makes the claim that the impact of the combined 3.25% efficiency dividend  effectively represents a 4.6% reduction in the funds available for operating  expenses.7 | 
  
    | 3.9 | In addition to suffering a disproportionate  impact because they hold a large number of assets, some cultural agencies also  referred to the disadvantage they suffer as a result of the methodology used to  adjust for inflation.  Of particular  concern is that while the efficiency dividend is applied to total net  departmental appropriations (including depreciation)8,  indexation adjustments are not applied to depreciation expenses.  This naturally means, again, that agencies  holding a large number of assets suffer an additional disadvantage. | 
  
    | 3.10 | It is clear to the Committee that the indexation  arrangements around depreciation disadvantage agencies that hold a significant  number of assets, particularly high value assets such as those held by cultural  agencies.  However, the Committee also notes  that depreciation funding arrangements are currently being examined by the net  cash funding working group in the context of the Department of Finance and  Deregulation’s Operation Sunlight9. The Committee keenly awaits the outcome of  that review. | 
  
    |  |  | 
  
    | Rising costs  | 
  
    | 3.11 | No agency, large or small, is immune from the  rising costs of leasing property, water, electricity and the like.  However, the Committee heard that an  additional burden is placed on cultural agencies responsible for the management  of high-value, high-maintenance assets.   For example, as at 30   June 2008, the National Capital Authority (NCA) was responsible for  more than $670 million in administered assets.  Over the past seven financial years, the  value of assets managed by the NCA has doubled (from $335 million in 2001-02 to  $672 million in 2007-08).10 However, since 1999, the NCA has not received  any additional funding to manage these cultural assets despite the fact there  have been hefty rises in the cost of water and electricity.11 The NCA also refer to other increases  specific to agencies that manage cultural assets as follows: 
  …increase in the horticultural contracts costs, dam  maintenance cost increases, construction costs, et cetera which are not only  location specific but also driven by national and international price  movements, such as the price of oil increases and the effect that that has on  the price of bitumen for road maintenance and the like.12 | 
  
    | 3.12 | At the hearings on 21 August, 8 September and 19 September 2008,  representatives from the National Gallery of Australia, the National Archives of  Australia, the Australian War Memorial, the Australian National   Maritime Museum  and the Office of the Official Secretary to the Governor-General gave  evidence.  All raised the imposition on  their agencies of rising energy and water costs in addition to other factors  such as international freight, petrol costs and lease price increases.   | 
  
    | 3.13 | Dr   Ron Radford  of the National Gallery of Australia  referred to the financial peculiarities around maintaining artwork  appropriately as follows: 
      Our electricity bill went up  $500,000 this year with no appropriation to make up for that, so that is added  on top of what the NCA might charge on top of the efficiency dividend. There is  no way that we can reduce electricity charges, because it is the environmental  control that looks after the $3.3 billion collection and lights the collection  when people come to visit. There are costs like that that you cannot reduce.  You cannot show the collection in darkness and you cannot turn off the air  conditioning to preserve this $3.3 billion collection…Looking after the  collection in environmental conditions and showing the collection is at our  core.13 | 
  
    | 3.14 | Mr   Ross Gibbs,  Director General of the National Archives of Australia, outlined the particular  difficulties his organisation faces in light of rising costs and the imposition  of the efficiency dividend: 
      One thing I want to stress is that the efficiency dividend is  not the only impact on the Archives or the other cultural agencies. It is a  combination of a range of things… I think you have got the message about rent  and energy cost increases. We are paying 11 to 64 per cent but we have had  heard figures even higher than that... Because of the contracts we are in we  are actually sharing the same cost increases. They are massive cost increases.  They have a unique effect on the Archives because we are all over the country.  We have 13 buildings—from Darwin to Hobart, from Perth to Brisbane, as  well as four in Canberra—so  these increases have a real knock-on effect for us. The impact of that really  began and hit us in 1996, when the former government sold off our buildings and  we had to lease them back. So we are a captive of lease price increases as well  as energy cost increases. In that sense, among the cultural institutions, we  are uniquely affected.14 | 
  
    | 3.15 | Major General Gower of the Australian War Memorial also  referred to what he described as a ‘knock on effect’ as a result of the  imposition of the efficiency dividend on the National Capital Authority: 
      [The National Capital Authority] have invited us to find a  quarter of a million dollars per year for ground maintenance. We are  challenging that but it seems to be a very nebulous argument at the moment.  That is going to cause an extra impost of a quarter of a million dollars for  looking after our grounds. People expect the Australian War Memorial to be  maintained in an outstanding condition.15 | 
  
    | 3.16 | Ms   Williams of the Australian National   Maritime Museum  referred to the increasing cost of international freight as an issue for  cultural institutions: 
  …one of the areas that a lot of museums face an increase in  cost is through international freight. Before terrorism, it used to be a lot  cheaper and freight companies were more generous.16 | 
  
    | 3.17 | Mr   Brien Hallett,  Deputy Official Secretary to the Governor-General, also outlined the challenges  his office faces in managing the rising utility costs associated with two  heritage properties, two heritage gardens and effectively two function centres:17 
  …if you look at supply costs…we believe that rates and  utilities have increased 19 per cent in the last year. Most Commonwealth agencies  lease their buildings, but we have to cover property and cleaning costs  ourselves, and we believe that it will be about a 26 per cent increase.18 | 
  
    | 3.18 | Mr   Hallet also outlined some  particular costs facing agencies responsible for managing heritage buildings: 
  …in July…the sea wall facing Sydney Harbour, which was a 19th  century sandstone wall, collapsed. We had to get that fixed very quickly, both  for the safety of people using the Harbour and the safety of guests, staff and  the Governor-General at Admiralty House. That was $80,000…Every time there is a  storm in Canberra,  we sometimes have problems with trees…If you lose three or four trees in one  storm, we are talking $20,000. That is not even in the budget, if you like. The  other experience with old properties is that you tend to pull up a floorboard,  so to speak, and find several other problems, whether it is dampness or  whatever.19 | 
  
    | 3.19 | Similarly, Mr Rake  highlighted the particular difficulties of the National Capital Authority that  is responsible for street and traffic lights: 
  …it is very difficult to try to find a way of saving  electricity there, where we cannot turn the traffic lights off for half of the  day.20 | 
  
    |  |  | 
  
    | Core functions | 
  
    | 3.20 | The Committee notes that, like ‘fixed costs’,  ‘core functions’ are not easy to define.   For the purposes of this inquiry the Committee assumes that maintaining  and developing collections, and making those collections accessible to the  Australian public is considered a core function of many of the national  cultural institutions.    | 
  
    | 3.21 | The Committee heard evidence to suggest that  while cultural agencies overall have maintained their core functions, this has  not universally been the case.  It has  neither been without difficulty nor is it sustainable.  For example, the Australian National Maritime  Museum (ANMM) submitted that, as a result of increasing costs, the ANMM would  no longer be able to undertake one of its core functions to grow the national  collection: 
      Unfortunately, measures that impact on the museum’s core  functions must now be taken…for the 2008/09 financial year, the museum has  cancelled a major exhibition and scaled back and deferred another exhibition.21…
 The ANMM, after 20 years of its application, no longer has  the ability to pay the dividend without compromising its core functions.22
 | 
  
    | 3.22 | Similarly, Mr Larkin of  The Australian Institute of Aboriginal  and Torres Strait Islander Studies (AIATSIS) outlined the particular  difficulties his organisation is facing in terms of maintaining a repository of  cultural heritage materials: 
      The efficiency dividend erodes our  capacity to care for our collections and, equally importantly, to provide  Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people  with access to their own cultural heritage materials. The potential for  expanding the collections under current financial restrictions is now minimal.  We are currently racing against time to digitise the most vulnerable parts of  our collections before analogue technologies become completely obsolete. If we  fail, these items will be lost forever. Yet we have had to reduce our staffing  in this program by eight positions to comply with the requirements of the  dividend.23 | 
  
    | 3.23 | The National Library of Australia (NLA) stated  that it has made significant reductions to its functions (these functions are  set out in Section 6 of  the National Library Act 1960).  These reductions are set out in the NLA’s  submission as follows: 
      Withdrawal  of the Library’s A-based officer from Jakarta,  effective from late 2009.  This officer  manages the acquisition of Indonesian publications, and selectively collects  from the wider region, for the Library and for six other Australian  libraries.  This will mean an inevitable  decline in the quality of the Library’s world-class Indonesian collection.A  reduction in the number of staff providing services in reading rooms, and in  the number of staff undertaking collection processing.  While these reductions have been carefully  targeted to minimise the impact on readers, there will be inevitable reductions  in the level of access to the Library’s collections.A reduction  in outreach programs.A  moratorium on loans for exhibitions for all borrowers except other Commonwealth  institutions and state libraries.A  reduction in the Library’s national and international leadership and  collaborative activities, including a reduction in the assistance which the  Library provides to other libraries in the Asia/Pacific region.A  reduction in the Library’s investment in new technology.24
 | 
  
    | 3.24 | A supporting view was expressed in the  submission of the National & State Libraries Australia (NSLA), an  organisation that represents National, State and Territory Libraries of  Australia and New Zealand.  It made the following specific points about  what it called the NLA’s core functions: 
      The efficiency dividend is affecting the core functions of the  National Library by:
      Forcing  cuts to services provided in reading rooms;Reducing  opening hours;Cutting  core collecting activities, particularly for the Asia/Pacific region where the  staff presence based in Indonesia  has had to be withdrawn;Reducing  capacity to assist other national libraries in the region and participate in  international forums; andFalling behind other national libraries in digital collecting and preservation  responsibilities.25 | 
  
    | 3.25 | The Australian Library and Information  Association also submitted that the core functions of the NLA would be  compromised by the ongoing efficiency dividend: 
      ALIA is concerned that the National Library’s capacity to  perform the core function of collecting the nation’s recorded knowledge,  information, and creative works is severely diminished by the effects of the  efficiency dividend.26 | 
  
    | 3.26 | The reason some agencies have been able to  maintain their core functions is because they have sought new sources of  funding.  For example, the Australian War  Memorial sought non-government sources of funding to maintain its core  functions: 
  …we, for this coming financial  year, budgeted for $7 million from non-government sources. That is quite  important because it enables us to do much more on our core functions of  ceremonies, interpretation, events and things like that which are essential for  a very active museum and cultural institution. Without that money, we would be  very lessened in what we can achieve and contribute as an institution.27 | 
  
    | 3.27 | As outlined above, while cultural agencies appear  to have been able to ‘keep their head above water’ in terms of providing core  functions to date, many of them argue that the application of the efficiency  dividend in its current form is not sustainable over the long term particularly  when these institutions are governed by a mandate to ‘grow’ their  collections.  For example, Section 6 of  the National Library Act 1960 states: 
      The functions of the  Library are, on behalf of the Commonwealth: (a) to maintain and  develop a national collection of library material, including a comprehensive  collection of library material relating to Australia and the Australian people…
 | 
  
    | 3.28 | The Collections Council of Australia Ltd also  notes: 
      A core function of collecting institutions is to develop  their collections.28 | 
  
    | 3.29 | Dr   Cathro from the NLA argues that it  is this mandate to grow that  makes the  imposition of the current funding arrangements on small cultural agencies  inappropriate: 
      The collecting institutions are impacted not only because we  are small but because we are required by statute to collect and that means we  are required by statute to grow. Each year, obviously, our collections are  larger than the year before. With that growth comes additional cost in  collection management, storage and housing preservation of the collections. So  what we really need, ideally, is a funding formula that takes account of the  growth that our statutes require us to make; instead, we have a funding formula  that does the opposite.29 | 
  
    | 3.30 | In a supplementary submission to the inquiry,  the Academy of the Humanities states: 
      Our core point is  that the efficiency dividend is the wrong instrument to employ if the objective  is to keep mission-directed agencies delivering services as their charters  require. These organisations have been charged with a task by government, with  the consent and support of the public at large, but they are increasingly  hampered in their ability to deliver on their responsibilities due to the  tightening strictures of the efficiency dividend. Their service charters,  organisational structures and missions make them entirely unlike the  departments, yet they are subject to a measure that was designed for  application to the departments (and with which the departments are able to find  ways to live).30 | 
  
    | 3.31 | Ms Meredith Hinchliffe,  a private individual who describes herself as a ‘stakeholder in Australia’s  collecting institutions’31 succinctly makes the point that a number of witnesses had expressed to the  Committee in the following statement: 
      There appears to be a contradiction in the imposed decrease  in operational funding for collecting institutions and their acknowledgement,  acceptance and expectations of their roles to develop and grow national  collections with associated public access and storage requirements. I think  that is a real issue.32 | 
  
    | 3.32 | The Committee is mindful of the potential risks  of cultural agencies not being able to meet the expectations of this  mandate.  Particularly in light of the  findings of a 1981 Joint Committee of Public Accounts inquiry into the  conservation and curatorial function of the Australian War Memorial33 which arose as a result of unfavourable findings of the Auditor-General.34 | 
  
    | 3.33 | Ms   Meredith Hinchliffe also makes a  similar point when she said: 
      I think we could look back to reports from perhaps 25 years  ago when the War Memorial was in quite a deal of trouble because it was not  looking after its collection and the Australian National Audit Office produced  quite a scathing report on the condition of the collections. While I am not  suggesting for a second that that is the case now, I think there is a risk that  could become a problem in the future.35 | 
  
    | 3.34 | The National Capital Authority also referred to  a reduction in promotional activity, one of the NCA’s core outputs, as a result  of a reduction in staff funding to support volunteer contributions.  This translates into fewer tours: 
      
        We do a reduced number of tours. Over at the National Capital  Exhibition, we have produced a teacher information pack so that teachers  accompanying school groups basically self-guide through the exhibition rather  than having an interpretive guide to go with them.36 | 
  
    | 3.35 | In its submission to the inquiry, the National  Capital Authority also outlined how funding just one staff position to  coordinate the activities of volunteers, and paying the costs of uniforms,  training and insurance had resulted in gaining over one hundred  volunteers.  However, as a result of the  ongoing efficiency dividend and recent budget savings initiatives the NCA was  no longer able to fund that position.  Mr Rake  described the impact of cutting the position that coordinated volunteers in the  following way: 
      It is an activity where we leverage the greatest benefit. For  an investment of $60,000 or $90,000, an employee might produce a couple of  hundred thousand worth of benefit. In assessing that value for money context,  we were aware that it was not a particularly efficient way to cut but we ran  out of other discretionary options.37 | 
  
    | 3.36 | The Committee notes the comments of Mr Stephen   Jones, National Secretary of the  CPSU: 
      When we are talking  about cultural institutions, let us not forget these museums, galleries and  centres of excellence are not elaborate wardrobes for storing cultural  artefacts. They are a core part of this nation’s attempt to instil cultural  diversity, to celebrate our cultural past and, hopefully, to set beacons for  where we would like to go as a nation.38 | 
  
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    | Discretionary activities  | 
  
    | 3.37 | As alluded to above, there is not necessarily a  clear distinction between ‘core’ and ‘discretionary’ functions.  However, on the basis of the evidence it  received, the Committee believes that cultural agencies are making significant  cuts to what appears to fall within their discretionary spending.  Of particular note were travelling  exhibitions and cooperative ventures.   | 
  
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    | Regional impact | 
  
    | 3.38 | Although it was acknowledged that the impact of  these reductions was hard to measure,39 it seemed clear that rural and regional areas would be disadvantaged by any  reduction in travelling exhibitions.  It  may also be that the full impact of such a reduction is yet to be felt: 
      It is also true to say that most of the national institutions  have maintained these outreach programs to date…It is really in the latest  iteration of that process that they have expressed, and we have observed them  expressing, that concern about their ability to do so…Given that many  institutions develop these programs up to two or four years in advance, it will take some time for that impact to be felt on  the ground.40 | 
  
    | 3.39 | The National Archives of Australia (NAA)  submitted that it had reduced its travelling exhibitions and they were now  undertaken only when the Archives could secure third-party sponsorship to fund  the venture.41 The NAA claimed that the impact of this change was to: 
  …significantly decrease  the reach of public access to the records of the Commonwealth, to people  outside capital cities.42 | 
  
    | 3.40 | The National Gallery of Australia also  advised that the number of travelling exhibitions displayed in Australia and  abroad had reduced from fourteen to nine this financial year compared to  last.  Only one new exhibition will be  released this year compared to an average of four in previous years.43 
      The cut back in new releases will have an impact particularly  in rural and regional communities in coming years.44 | 
  
    | 3.41 | At the hearing on 8 September 2008, Ms Williams  advised that the Australian National Maritime Museum had cancelled a major  exhibition program being conducted in conjunction with a museum in Paris and  had scaled down another project, making it less challenging and adventurous.45  The Committee also notes the impact of these  arrangements on the reputation of the Museum.46 | 
  
    | 3.42 | The Committee heard that one of the consequences  of scaling back touring exhibitions is that regional and rural staff lose  opportunities for professional development through the influx of staff from  major cultural institutions.47 This is particularly important in a context  where highly-skilled staff (e.g., curators, conservators and archivists) are  difficult to find.48 | 
  
    | 3.43 | Some further intangible losses from scaling down  travelling exhibitions and the like can be inferred from Ms Hinchliffe’s  description of the advantages to be gained by engaging in outreach activities: 
      It is an amazing thing to reach out  to those communities—and they will be in rural and regional communities on the  whole—to bring all the things…: that leadership role, that confirmation of  involvement in their own communities, that celebration of what is in their  communities. It also gives people the courage to actually see what is around in  their communities, work with it, do something with it and celebrate it.49 | 
  
    | 3.44 | A similar sentiment was expressed in Museums  Australia’s submission: 
      In comparison with the remit of their state and local  colleagues, the role of the national institutions is to develop programs that  seek to reach out in all directions simultaneously, and to all  Australians, no matter how far-distant from the national capital they may  be. It is the outward-directed institutional orientation, the orbital  communication drive, access provision and services delivery by the national  institutions that play a hugely important role – often quiet and insufficiently  championed – in support of a shared  national identity.50 | 
  
    | 3.45 | The Committee is deeply concerned about the  impact this reduction in discretionary spending would have on rural and  regional areas.  The Committee agrees  with the following comments from the Community and Public Sector Union (CPSU)  about the reduction in NGA’s touring exhibitions: 
      The gallery may be saving money and balancing their budget,  but at what cost?51 | 
  
    |  |  | 
  
    | Cooperative projects | 
  
    | 3.46 | In addition to scaling back their travelling  exhibitions, the Committee heard that agencies were also reducing the number of  cooperative projects they are engaged in.   This was of particular note in relation to the work of the NLA.  The following concern, expressed by the  Australian Dictionary of Biography, was echoed by others: 
      The on-going  efficiency dividend's impact on the National Library of Australia (NLA) is  adversely affecting not only individual researchers but also cultural  organizations, such as the Australian Dictionary of Biography (ADB), that rely  on the many innovative, online bibliographic services developed by the NLA.52 | 
  
    | 3.47 | The  Victorian Public Library and Information Network (Viclink) also made the  following comment: 
      The NLA is heavily  relied upon both locally and nationally in terms of digital preservation and access  to cultural collections. As part of the service, the Inter-Library loans and  document delivery transactions have substantially increased public  accessibility to library collections across Victoria and Australia. The NLA is also an  essential part of Australia's  national information infrastructure  enabling libraries to operate efficiently by supporting resource sharing,  cooperative collection development, cataloguing and reference.53 | 
  
    | 3.48 | A number of organisations, such as the  Australian Map Circle,54 and individuals who rely heavily of the NLA for research purposes also provided  submissions outlining their concern about the impact of the ongoing efficiency  dividend on the NLA’s capacity to facilitate research and learning.55 | 
  
    | 3.49 | The submission of the Libraries Australia  Advisory Committee referred to the Libraries Australia service which is used by  1,400 libraries in the management of their collections and is an avenue for  cooperation between libraries nationally and internationally.  Libraries Australia provides advice to staff  on how to use the services effectively and it holds an annual forum for  librarians to maintain their currency and share professional knowledge.  The Libraries Australia Advisory Committee  further suggests that these key activities are ‘jeopardised by the continuance  of the efficiency dividend’.56 | 
  
    | 3.50 | It is worth noting that the inquiry also  received a number of submissions regarding the scaling back of the NLA’s Indonesian Acquisitions Project.  Again, whether this forms a core or a  discretionary part of the NLA’s activities is not clear cut.  What is certain, however, is that this action  has elicited a great deal of concern amongst individuals57 and academics.58 The concerns  centred on the importance of maintaining high-quality research resources in  areas that are strategically important to Australia and on the concern that  Australia is becoming less appealing to overseas students. | 
  
    | 3.51 | Mr Larkin, Principal of AIATSIS, also outlined a key project  that could not be pursued as a result of meeting the obligations imposed by the  efficiency dividend.  Return of Materials  to the Indigenous Communities program (ROMTIC) was a project in partnership  with a number of main communities where artefacts, which had been accumulated  in the past, sometimes without the consent of Indigenous people, were to be  returned to them.   | 
  
    | 3.52 | The loss  of projects such as this, which would also have incorporated a number of  traineeships for Indigenous people, is significant in the current context: 
      The tragedy of it has been that, in the wake of the national  apology and the efforts to close the gap—and with the importance of cultural  heritage and the transmission of culture as building blocks of people’s social  identity and self-esteem—we have had to compromise that program at the point  where we were starting to see runs on the board.59 | 
  
    | 3.53 | The Committee also notes the role the National  Capital Authority plays in maintaining the grounds of other cultural  institutions.  Where in the past the NCA  undertook maintenance of the grounds for the War Memorial, the National Gallery  and the High Court, this arrangement is no longer viable for the organisation: 
      Unfortunately our budget has reached a point where we are  unable to continue those arrangements any longer, and we have recently had to  contact those agencies and withdraw from the [memoranda of understanding].60 | 
  
    | 3.54 | The Committee also notes that the NCA’s  withdrawal from memoranda of understanding with institutions such as the AWM,  NGA and the High Court could result in a ‘false economy’.  That is, rather than the one contractor  maintaining the grounds of these three institutions under direction from the  NCA, the same contractor may now be doing the same work in accordance with  three separate contracts.61 | 
  
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    | Innovation/digitisation | 
  
    | 3.55 | One key aspect of the work of the cultural  institutions relates to their capacity for innovation.  As outlined in the following quotes, there  are rising public expectations that these agencies be innovative and forward-thinking: 
      The cultural agencies are, without any doubt, currently  struggling to fulfil core functions, let alone respond to public and government  expectations to continue innovating, expanding and finding new ways to serve  their various constituencies.62
 Business processes in an agency  gradually change due, for example, to new technologies and the overall  expectations by government and the community for the agency. For instance, if  cultural agencies have objects in their collections it is now expected by most  these should be able to be viewed on-line.63
 | 
  
    | 3.56 | The point was made by AIATSIS, however, that  innovation tended to be restricted in the following manner: 
      Unfortunately, innovation has been largely  driven by the need to find alternative ways to maintain the current capacity to  perform core functions rather than by considerations of growth and development.64 | 
  
    | 3.57 | Of particular note is the capacity of agencies  to digitise their collections in a context of a rapidly shrinking budget: 
  …in the last 10 or 15 years—many of the collecting  institutions have been doing their best to deal with an almost overwhelming  challenge which we call the ‘digital deluge’—that is, we have to respond to the  fact that large and growing portions of our cultural heritage are now created  in digital form.65 | 
  
    | 3.58 | At the hearing on 21 August 2008, Mr Gibbs of  the National Archives of Australia indicated that while they are currently ‘up  to speed’ in the digital arena, they are fearful that they will not be in a  position to build on their current knowledge in this area: 
      We have done the clever bit, the  bit that is relatively cheap, but, for the bigger bit—that is, to build a  digital archive—we do not have the resources and cannot find them within our  current budget with the pressures we  have.66 | 
  
    | 3.59 | A similar story was expressed by Dr Cathro  of the National Library: 
  …I think we are rating up there in  terms of the approaches, the degree of innovation and the work we have done  with others in harvesting web resources and also in things like digitising  newspapers. We are struggling in terms of the volumes and quantities…67 | 
  
    | 3.60 | Overall, it can be said that many of the major  cultural agencies are struggling to meet the challenges posed by digitisation  as evidenced in the following quotes from representatives of the NLA, NAA, and  the NGA: 
      We are doing our best to respond to  this challenge but, in order to meet this digital deluge challenge, we really  need more resources not less.68Eighty-three per cent of our use is now online. To get stuff  online you have to scan it. We are doing that from all parts of our budget. We  have our state officers doing it in their spare time. But increasingly we are  not able to do that, and it is one of the areas in which our budget is  suffering because of these efficiency dividends.69
 
       We have digitised 20 per cent of  our collection, and we had aspirations to digitise 10 per cent a year. We have  been unable to do that because of staffing restrictions.70  | 
  
    | 3.61 | The submission from the Hume Libraries made  reference to the importance of the National Library’s role as a leader in the  digitisation and the consequences of its diminishing funding: 
  …the NLA is a leader in the use of digital preservation and  access to cultural collections.  It’s  PictureAustralia, MusicAustralia, Pandora,   Australia  Dancing, and Australian Research Online services facilitate collection,  preservation and access to the cultural history of our nation…Without funding  these services will lose their dynamic appeal and become merely static  archives.71 | 
  
    | 3.62 | The relevance of digitisation to Indigenous  communities was highlighted by the Academy of the Humanities: 
      The digitised forms—the electronic  mode—are absolutely critical. So you can palpably feel it when it is there. If  that is not to keep on growing, you just sort of wonder what happens to those kinds  of communities. Will they ever really be integrated in the best sense of a  diverse society?72 | 
  
    | 3.63 | Mr   Larkin from AIATSIS identified a  number of challenges around digitising its collection to make it more  accessible.  This includes the race to  complete the process prior to analogue technology becoming obsolete in 10 to 15  years: 
      There is not a large proportion digitised; there is a large  proportion to digitise…that will be compromised by the speed that we can  digitise to get those materials on that archive, otherwise people will have to  physically come to Canberra  to view and access them.73 | 
  
    | 3.64 | The one agency that appears to have less  difficulty in meeting the digitisation demand is the Australian War Memorial,  however, this is because they have chosen to use funding for their digitisation  program from elsewhere: 
      We have a major digitisation  program at the Australian War Memorial. It is not affected, as you would  appreciate, because we have chosen to take the hit in depreciation funding.74 | 
  
    | 3.65 | While the Committee heard that there has been  some attempts by cultural agencies to collectively put in proposals for funding  to digitise their collections, the Committee was also told that a ‘one-size  fits all’ approach to digitisation may not be appropriate for agencies that have  mixed collections (such as the Australian War Memorial).75  | 
  
    | 3.66 | All agencies are in agreement about the  importance of keeping up to date with the latest technological advances.  However, there is a great deal of concern  that the growth will not be able to continue in the current climate: 
      I think that at a  time when we ought to be having a dialogue about growth and development what we  are having is one about trying to tread water and keep our heads above it.76 
 I think what we are all saying is that we have modest  programs running that barely meet our requirements. What we need and what we  look to in other jurisdictions, particularly overseas, are some serious, large  programs which could ensure that this material is preserved forever and is also  available online throughout Australia.  We have not had the resources to do the big projects that are required.77
 | 
  
    |  |  | 
  
    | Economic and community benefits | 
  
    | 3.67 | Although difficult to quantify, the Committee  was interested to hear evidence about the importance of these cultural  institutions to the Australian community both in economic and non-economic  terms.   | 
  
    | 3.68 | For example, the Committee heard that the  recently held Turner  to Monet exhibition was visited by 180,000  people78 and added nearly $30 million to the Canberra economy.79 Similarly, the National Treasures from Australia’s Great  Libraries exhibition went to all capital cities and was  seen by 420,000 people. | 
  
    | 3.69 | The National Gallery of Australia had  half a million visitors over the last year and 564,000 visitors to travelling  exhibitions that went to 88 venues around the country.80 | 
  
    | 3.70 | Ms Mary- Louise   Williams of the Australian National   Maritime Museum  provided the Committee with insight into the importance of the ANMM’s assets to  the community as follows: 
  …we have a submarine and a destroyer out in the water near a  very busy area— And we have Endeavour, of which we are hugely proud…We have the  Welcome Wall as well, and we have nearly 20,000 names on that wall, which is a  celebration of migration to Australia by sea. And we now have inadvertently, I  have to confess, a fantastically valuable folk database of migration history in  Australia  because of the Welcome Wall…We have 5,000 people twice a year who come to  celebrate the Welcome Wall. It is phenomenal.81 | 
  
    | 3.71 | Ms   Williams further demonstrated the  commitment of all the cultural agencies in the following comment: 
      We face the community; we do not put our backs to the  community and we work very hard with them. We had Peruvian Day there a few  weeks ago and we had, on Sunday, nearly 8,000 people and three llamas at the  museum, and it was just fantastic. That is not a traditional museum-going  community. So we do try to extend beyond what is imagined to be the museum  community.82 | 
  
    | 3.72 | At the hearing on 21 August 2008, Dr Cathro of  the NLA also made the following points about the importance of cultural  institutions to the community: 
      I think the economic  benefit of what we provide is very hard to quantify. Basically, we provide  information that supports research, lifelong learning, education and so on for  a wide range of different users. As Ross Gibbs  commented earlier, we did have an Access Economics cost-benefit analysis of the  development of our digital collections which indicated a sixfold benefit,  depending on how you model this in terms of user access model and the value of  user access. But some of these benefits in education, lifelong learning and  research support are very hard to quantify.83 | 
  
    | 3.73 | In its submission to the inquiry, the Australian  Federation of Friends of Museums described the loss of benefits to the community  as a ‘trickle-down effect’.84 More particularly they reiterate the loss to  communities when access to cultural experiences and educational programs is  restricted by reducing travelling exhibitions.   They also argue that as museums and Friends groups feel powerless and  neglected, they will have less to offer volunteers which will translate into a  loss of membership and subsequent funds and subscriptions.85 | 
  
    |  |  | 
  
    | Conclusion | 
  
    | 3.74 | The Committee was impressed by the commitment  and dedication exhibited by all the cultural agencies that provided evidence to  the inquiry.  This is particularly so in  light of the financial difficulties these agencies have had to face since the  imposition of the efficiency dividend.   | 
  
    | 3.75 | The Committee notes the significant role the  Australian War Memorial plays in the Australian community and is concerned  about any matters that may erode or diminish that role.   Similarly, the Committee notes the pivotal  role of the National Library of Australia in supporting a range of individuals  and other knowledge-based organisations.   The Committee is also keenly aware of the particular benefit of  organisations such as AIATSIS to the ongoing development of Indigenous  communities. | 
  
    | 3.76 | Having considered the evidence, the Committee is  of the view that it is inappropriate that smaller public sector agencies  holding significant numbers of assets and whose appropriation funding centres  on  depreciation of those assets should  be subject to the same financial constraints as those applied to agencies who  do not hold such assets. | 
  
    | 3.77 | Moreover, the Committee finds that while there  is some operational diversity across these cultural agencies, there are a  number of common features that make the imposition of the efficiency dividend  in its current form inappropriate.  Of  most significance is the incongruity between the legislated mandate of these  agencies to grow and develop their collections at the same time as needing to  find productivity improvements beyond those in the general economy and  delivering a wider range of services due to technological change. | 
  
    | 3.78 | On the basis of the evidence it received and the  diversity evident across these organisations, the Committee is not in a  position to make a prescriptive recommendation about the type of funding model  that might be appropriate for all these cultural agencies.  The Committee believes that determining the  details of such funding models is best left to these agencies in consultation  with Finance and the Australian Public Service Commissioner. | 
  
    | 3.79 | Recommendation 3The Department of Finance and Deregulation, the  Australian Public Service Commissioner and each cultural agency jointly develop  a new funding model for cultural agencies.   This model should recognise the importance of funding the mandate for  growth and development of collections and the proportion of their expenses  apportioned to depreciation. The Committee notes that recommendation 8 will  also apply to these agencies. | 
  
    |  | 
  
    | 1 | This includes Questacon, which is featured  in chapter 5. Back | 
  
    | 2 | As at June 2007. Back | 
  
    | 3 | National Gallery of Australia, sub  6, pp 1-2. Back | 
  
    | 4 | Australian   National Maritime   Museum, sub 15, p 1. Back | 
  
    | 5 | Australian War Memorial, sub 26, p 1. Back | 
  
    | 6 | Mr Alan    Froud,  transcript, 21 August 2008,  p 38. Back | 
  
    | 7 | National Library of Australia, sub 41, p  2. Back | 
  
    | 8 | See Department of Finance and  Administration, Estimates Memorandum –  2007/42, p 6. Back | 
  
    | 9 | Operation Sunlight is the Government’s  plan to improve Budget accountability and transparency – see The Hon Lindsay  Tanner MP, Appointment of Senator Murray  to Advise on Improving Budget Transparency, media release, 24 March 2008. Back | 
  
    | 10 | National Capital Authority, sub 47, p 3. Back | 
  
    | 11 | National Capital Authority, sub 47, p 5. Back | 
  
    | 12 | Mr Christopher Doogan, transcript, 19 September 2008, p 67. Back | 
  
    | 13 | Dr Ron Radford, transcript, 21 August 2008, p 32. Back | 
  
    | 14 | Mr Ross Gibbs, transcript 21 August 2008, p 6. Back | 
  
    | 15 | Major General Steve Gower,  transcript, 21 August 2008,  p 4. Back | 
  
    | 16 | Ms Mary-Louise Williams, transcript, 8 September 2008, p 70. Back | 
  
    | 17 | Mr Brien Hallett, transcript, 19 September 2008, pp 55-56. Back | 
  
    | 18 | Mr Brien Hallett, transcript, 19 September 2008, p 58. Back | 
  
    | 19 | Mr Brien Hallett, transcript, 19 September 2008, p 59. Back | 
  
    | 20 | Mr Gary Rake, transcript, 19 September 2008, p 71. Back | 
  
    | 21 | Australian   National Maritime   Museum, sub 15, p 4. Back | 
  
    | 22 | Australian   National Maritime   Museum, sub 15, p 6. Back | 
  
    | 23 | Mr Steven Larkin, transcript, 21 August, 2008, p 3. Back | 
  
    | 24 | National Library of Australia, sub 41, p 4. Back | 
  
    | 25 | National & State Libraries Australia, sub  39, p 3. Back | 
  
    | 26 | Australian Library and Information  Association, sub 53, p 2. Back | 
  
    | 27 | Major General Steve Gower,  transcript, 21 August 2008,  p 3. Back | 
  
    | 28 | Collections Council of Australia Ltd, sub  55, p 4. Back | 
  
    | 29 | Dr Warwick Cathro, transcript 21 August 2008, p 5. Back | 
  
    | 30 | Academy of the  Humanities, sub 11.1, pp 1-2. Back | 
  
    | 31 | Ms Meredith    Hinchliffe, sub  19, p 1. Back | 
  
    | 32 | Ms Meredith    Hinchliffe, transcript,  21 August 2008, p  43. Back | 
  
    | 33 | Joint Committee of Public Accounts, Report 196 Australian War Memorial –  Curatorial and Conservation Functions, 1982. Back | 
  
    | 34 | Auditor-General’s  Report, March 1981. Back | 
  
    | 35 | Ms Meredith    Hinchliffe,  transcript, 21 August 2008,  p 43. Back | 
  
    | 36 | Mr Gary Rake, transcript, 19 September 2008, p 69. Back | 
  
    | 37 | Mr Gary Rake, transcript, 19 September 2008, pp 76-77. Back | 
  
    | 38 | Mr Stephen Jones, transcript, 20 August 2008, p 37. Back | 
  
    | 39 | Mr Ross Gibbs, transcript, 21 August 2008, p 30. Back | 
  
    | 40 | Ms Judy Kean, transcript, 17 September 2008, p 3. Back | 
  
    | 41 | National Archives of Australia, sub 27, p  3. Back | 
  
    | 42 | National Archives of Australia, sub 27, p  3. Back | 
  
    | 43 | National Gallery of Australia, sub 6, p 3. Back | 
  
    | 44 | National Gallery of Australia, sub  6, p 3. Back | 
  
    | 45 | Ms Mary-Louise Williams, transcript, 8 September 2008, p 69. Back | 
  
    | 46 | See transcript, 8 September 2008, p 69. Back | 
  
    | 47 | Ms Meredith    Hinchliffe,  transcript, 21 August 2008,  p 46. Back | 
  
    | 48 | See transcript 21 August 2008, p 21. Back | 
  
    | 49 | Ms Meredith    Hinchliffe,  transcript, 21 August 2008,  p 58. Back | 
  
    | 50 | Museums Australia, sub 46, p 3. Back | 
  
    | 51 | Community and Public Sector Union, sub  58.1, p 4. Back | 
  
    | 52 | Australian Dictionary of Biography, sub  45, p 1. Back | 
  
    | 53 | Viclink, sub 33, p 1. Back | 
  
    | 54 | Australian Map Circle, sub 44, p 1. Back | 
  
    | 55 | See submissions 5, 20, 30. Back | 
  
    | 56 | Libraries Australia Advisory Committee,  sub 4, pp 1-2. Back | 
  
    | 57 | Mr Andrew Gosling, sub 32. Back | 
  
    | 58 | See in particular submissions from Mr Tom   Campbell (sub 20), Associate Professor John Butcher (sub 36), Professor David   Hill (sub 37), Dr Jemma   Purdey (sub 43), Associate Professor Charles Coppel (sub 48), Professor CC MacKnight (sub 49) and Asian Studies  Association of Australia (sub 51). Back | 
  
    | 59 | Mr Steven Larkin, transcript, 21 August 2008, p 28. Back | 
  
    | 60 | Mr Gary Rake, transcript, 19 September 2008, p 72. Back | 
  
    | 61 | See transcript 19 September 2008, p 74. Back | 
  
    | 62 | Australian   Academy of the  Humanities, sub 11, p 3. Back | 
  
    | 63 | Australian Society of Archivists, sub 7, p  2. Back | 
  
    | 64 | Australian Institute of Aboriginal  and Torres Strait Islander Studies, sub 57 (B), p 5. Back | 
  
    | 65 | Dr Warwick Cathro, transcript, 21 August 2008, p 5. Back | 
  
    | 66 | Mr Ross Gibbs, transcript, 21 August 2008, p 7. Back | 
  
    | 67 | Dr Warwick Cathro, transcript, 21 August 2008, p 16. Back | 
  
    | 68 | Dr Ron Radford, transcript, 21 August 2008, p 14. Back | 
  
    | 69 | Dr Warwick Cathro, transcript, 21 August 2008, p 5. Back | 
  
    | 70 | Mr Ross Gibbs, transcript, 21 August 2008, p 7. Back | 
  
    | 71 | Hume Libraries, sub 9, p 1. Back | 
  
    | 72 | Professor Deryck   Schreuder, 21 August 2008, p 58. Back | 
  
    | 73 | Mr Steve Larkin, transcript, 21 August 2008, p 11. Back | 
  
    | 74 | Major General Steve Gower,  transcript, 21 August 2008,  p 12.  It should be noted that in its  evidence to the inquiry the Department of Finance Deregulation stated that it  was acceptable for agencies to apply depreciation funding to other uses,  provided these amounts were later replaced:   Dr Ian Watt,  transcript 19 September 2008,  p 14. Back | 
  
    | 75 | See transcript, 21 August 2008, pp 13-14. Back | 
  
    | 76 | Mr Steve Larkin, transcript, 21 August 2008, p 39. Back | 
  
    | 77 | Mr Ross Gibbs, transcript, 21 August 2008, p 13. Back | 
  
    | 78 | Ms Meredith    Hinchliffe,  transcript, 21 August 2008,  p 55. Back | 
  
    | 79 | Dr Ron Radford, transcript, 21 August 2008, p 5. Back | 
  
    | 80 | Ms Meredith    Hinchliffe,  transcript, 21 August 2008,  p 55. Back | 
  
    | 81 | Ms Mary-Louise Williams, transcript, 8 September 2008, p 78. Back | 
  
    | 82 | Ms Mary-Louise Williams, transcript, 8 September 2008, p 78. Back | 
  
    | 83 | Dr Warwick Cathro, transcript, 21 August 2008, p 25. Back | 
  
    | 84 | Australian Federation of Friends of  Museums, sub 67, p 1. Back | 
  
    | 85 | Australian Federation of Friends of  Museums, sub 67, p 1. Back |